SSIS ScriptTask change Value property of Variable - variables

I try to simply change value of SSIS variable doing this code in ScriptTask:
string path = Dts.Connections["BazyPobrane"].ConnectionString.ToString();
string[] nameZIParray = Directory.GetFiles(path, "*.ZIP");
string[] nameRARarray = Directory.GetFiles(path, "*.RAR");
foreach (string nameZIP in nameZIParray) //search new ZIP
{
if (File.GetCreationTime(nameZIP) > DateTime.Now.AddDays(-1))
{
Dts.Variables["User::NazwaPliku"].Value = Path.GetFileName(nameZIP);
}
}
foreach (string nameRAR in nameRARarray) //search new RAR
{
if (File.GetCreationTime(nameRAR) > DateTime.Now.AddDays(-1))
{
Dts.Variables["User::NazwaPliku"].Value = Path.GetFileName(nameRAR);
}
}
Dts.TaskResult = (int)ScriptResults.Success;
After executing ScriptTask it simply don't change the variable Value. Debug mode seems fine. Maybe i miss some component settings?
Thx!

Some things to check:
Are you sure the variable isn't changing? If you put a subsequent script task with a MessageBox in place, does it show the correct value?
I don't think you need the variable type, i.e. remove "user::"
Make sure the variable is in the ReadWriteVariables property, as suggested by #OcasoP
What's the scope of the variable? Make sure you don't have two copies at different scopes, or that at least the one you do have is visible from the scope of the script
You could try locking the variable before writing to it (which should be equivalent to (3) above)
Code example for the last point:
IDTSVariables100 variables = null;
this.VariableDispenser.LockOneForWrite("NazwaPliku",ref variables);
variables[0].Value = myValue;
variables.Unlock();

debug your script task adding MsgBox(variable_name) and see its value through the execution.
Best debugging option :)

Related

Replacing Type with var for all 'Class class = new Class()' usages in Java project

I recently switched to Java 11 for a rather big project, and would like to switch to using var class = new Class() instead of Class class = new CLass().
I tried using Intellij Structural Search (and replace) for this, but its turning out to be more complex than expected.
My first attempt was $Type$ $Inst$ = new $Constructor$($Argument$);, which also matches global variables (which don't allow var).
My second attempt is:
class $Class$ {
$ReturnType$ $Method$ ($ParameterType$ $Parameter$) throws $ExceptionType$ {
$Statements$;
final $Type$ $Inst$ = new $Constructor$($Argument$);
$Statements2$;
}
}
Which misses all calls inside e.g. try blocks (since they get matched by the expressions)
Any help would be greatly appreciated!
Use your first template
$Type$ $Inst$ = new $Constructor$($Argument$);
But add a Script modifier on the $Inst$ variable with the following text:
Inst instanceof com.intellij.psi.PsiLocalVariable
Alternatively you may want to try the Local variable type can be omitted inspection that is available in IntelliJ IDEA.

Print SSRSReport to file (.PDF)

I need to find a way to "print" a SrsReport, in my case SalesInvoice, as .PDF (or any kind of file) to a specific location.
For this I modified the SRSPrintDestinationSettings to output the SalesInvoice-Report as a .PDF:
settings = controller.parmReportContract().parmPrintSettings();
settings.printMediumType(SRSPrintMediumType::File);
settings.fileFormat(SRSReportFileFormat::PDF);
settings.overwriteFile(true);
settings.fileName(#'\\AXDEV\Bottomline\Test\test.pdf');
Somehow this gets ignored and I recive a Email with the report as .PDF attached.
For example this will run on ax 2012 but won't print to PDF for me.
SRSPrintDestinationSettings settings;
CustInvoiceJour custInvoiceJour;
SrsReportRunController controller = new SrsReportRunController();
PurchPurchaseOrderContract rdpContract = new PurchPurchaseOrderContract();
SalesInvoiceContract salesInvoiceContract = new SalesInvoiceContract();
select firstOnly1 * from custInvoiceJour where custInvoiceJour.SalesId != "";
// Define report and report design to use
controller.parmReportName(ssrsReportStr(SalesInvoice,Report));
// Use execution mode appropriate to your situation
controller.parmExecutionMode(SysOperationExecutionMode::Synchronous);
rdpContract.parmRecordId(custInvoiceJour.RecId);
controller.parmReportContract().parmRdpContract(rdpContract);
// Explicitly provide all required parameters
salesInvoiceContract.parmRecordId(custInvoiceJour.RecId); // Record id must be passed otherwise the report will be empty
controller.parmReportContract().parmRdpContract(salesInvoiceContract);
salesInvoiceContract.parmCountryRegionISOCode(SysCountryRegionCode::countryInfo()); // comment this code if tested in pre release
// Change print settings as needed
settings = controller.parmReportContract().parmPrintSettings();
settings.printMediumType(SRSPrintMediumType::File);
settings.fileFormat(SRSReportFileFormat::PDF);
settings.overwriteFile(true);
settings.fileName(#'\\AXDEV\Bottomline\Test\test.pdf');
//tokens = settings as SrsPrintDestinationTokens();
//controller.parmPrintDestinationTokens(null);
//Suppress report dialog
controller.parmShowDialog(false);
// Execute the report
controller.startOperation();
Questions:
Is this the correct way to print a srsReport to .pdf?
Am I passing/setting the printerSettings correctly?
Where does it say "Send Email"?
EDIT: Code is working fine. We are using external code of a company which simply doesnt implement this.
Use the cleaner code of Alex Kwitny
Here is working code for me. I just quickly coded this from scratch/memory based off of glancing at yours, so compare for differences.
I have two things marked (1) and (2) for you to try with your code, or just copy/paste mine.
static void JobSendToPDFInvoice(Args _args)
{
SrsReportRunController controller = new SrsReportRunController();
SRSPrintDestinationSettings settings;
CustInvoiceJour custInvoiceJour = CustInvoiceJour::findRecId(5637925275);
SalesInvoiceContract salesInvoiceContract = new SalesInvoiceContract();
Args args = new Args();
controller.parmReportName(ssrsReportStr(SalesInvoice, Report));
controller.parmExecutionMode(SysOperationExecutionMode::Synchronous);
controller.parmShowDialog(false);
salesInvoiceContract.parmRecordId(custInvoiceJour.RecId);
salesInvoiceContract.parmDocumentTitle(CustInvoiceJour.InvoiceId);
salesInvoiceContract.parmCountryRegionISOCode(SysCountryRegionCode::countryInfo());
// (1) Try by passing args
args.record(custInvoiceJour);
args.parmEnum(PrintCopyOriginal::Original);
args.parmEnumType(enumNum(PrintCopyOriginal));
controller.parmReportContract().parmRdpContract(salesInvoiceContract);
controller.parmArgs(args);
// (2) Try explicitly preventing loading from last value
// controller.parmLoadFromSysLastValue(false);
// Change print settings as needed
settings = controller.parmReportContract().parmPrintSettings();
settings.printMediumType(SRSPrintMediumType::File);
settings.fileFormat(SRSReportFileFormat::PDF);
settings.overwriteFile(true);
settings.fileName(#'C:\Temp\Invoice.pdf');
controller.startOperation();
}
Since you are talking about the sales invoice the report is using the print management feature and you cannot simply override the print settings like that.
You need to override the runPrintMgmt on the controller class and determine there whether you want default print management or your own code.
See this post for an example: http://www.winfosoft.com/blog/microsoft-dynamics-ax/manipulating-printer-settings-with-x

SSIS - how to access system variables in Script Task

Can anyone please advice how to access/read system variables in Script Component (e.g I want to package name from this variable System::PackageName in Script Component)
In the Script Task Editor, provide the variable names you want to access (for example System::PackageName) in the ReadOnlyVariables field.
From the script, in the C# example, use this:
public void Main()
{
bool fireAgain = true;
// Read the variable
String PackageName = (String)Dts.Variables["System::PackageName"].Value;
// Post the value to progress results
Dts.Events.FireInformation(3, "Package name:", PackageName, "", 0, ref fireAgain);
Dts.TaskResult = (int)ScriptResults.Success;
}
The results:

Why does this LINQ query assign a value of 1 to a NULL value from the database?

The ExamVersion class has an int? property named SourceSafeVersionNum
When I execute the following code:
var query = from examVersion in db.ExamVersions
where examVersion.ExamVersionID == ExamVersionID
select examVersion;
foreach (ExamVersion examVer in query.ToList())
{
yield return examVer;
}
examVer.SourceSafeVersionNum is set to 1 even though it is NULL in the database.
When I run the SQL code generated by LINQ in SQL Server, the SourceSafeVersionNum column value is NULL (as I'd expect) but in the foreach loop the examVer.SourceSafeVersionNum is 1.
I can't find anywhere in the code where a default value is assigned or any similar logic.
Any ideas why/where this value is being set to 1?
Here is the property declaration (generated by a .dbml file)
[Column(Storage="_SourceSafeVersionNum", DbType="Int", UpdateCheck=UpdateCheck.Never)]
public System.Nullable<int> SourceSafeVersionNum
{
get
{
return this._SourceSafeVersionNum;
}
set
{
if ((this._SourceSafeVersionNum != value))
{
this.OnSourceSafeVersionNumChanging(value);
this.SendPropertyChanging();
this._SourceSafeVersionNum = value;
this.SendPropertyChanged("SourceSafeVersionNum");
this.OnSourceSafeVersionNumChanged();
}
}
}
Have you tried setting a breakpoint in the set{} method of the property to see what else might be populating its value? You might catch the culprit in the act, then look at the Call Stack to see who it is.
As a follow up to this, here is what happened:
The code that retrieved the value from the database was being called twice but through two different code paths. The code path that was assigning the value of 1 was being stepped over by the debugger so I didn't see it.

Scoping in embedded groovy scripts

In my app, I use Groovy as a scripting language. To make things easier for my customers, I have a global scope where I define helper classes and constants.
Currently, I need to run the script (which builds the global scope) every time a user script is executed:
context = setupGroovy();
runScript( context, "global.groovy" ); // Can I avoid doing this step every time?
runScript( context, "user.groovy" );
Is there a way to setup this global scope once and just tell the embedded script interpreter: "Look here if you can't find a variable"? That way, I could run the global script once.
Note: Security is not an issue here but if you know a way to make sure the user can't modify the global scope, that's an additional plus.
Shamelessly stolen from groovy.codehaus :
The most complete solution for people
who want to embed groovy scripts into
their servers and have them reloaded
on modification is the
GroovyScriptEngine. You initialize the
GroovyScriptEngine with a set of
CLASSPATH like roots that can be URLs
or directory names. You can then
execute any Groovy script within those
roots. The GSE will also track
dependencies between scripts so that
if any dependent script is modified
the whole tree will be recompiled and
reloaded.
Additionally, each time you run a
script you can pass in a Binding that
contains properties that the script
can access. Any properties set in the
script will also be available in that
binding after the script has run. Here
is a simple example:
/my/groovy/script/path/hello.groovy:
output = "Hello, ${input}!"
import groovy.lang.Binding;
import groovy.util.GroovyScriptEngine;
String[] roots = new String[] { "/my/groovy/script/path" };
GroovyScriptEngine gse = new GroovyScriptEngine(roots);
Binding binding = new Binding();
binding.setVariable("input", "world");
gse.run("hello.groovy", binding);
System.out.println(binding.getVariable("output"));
This will print "Hello, world!".
Found: here
Would something like that work for you?
A simple solution is to use the code from groovy.lang.GroovyShell: You can precompile the script like so:
GroovyCodeSource gcs = AccessController.doPrivileged( new PrivilegedAction<GroovyCodeSource>() {
public GroovyCodeSource run() {
return new GroovyCodeSource( scriptCode, fileName, GroovyShell.DEFAULT_CODE_BASE );
}
} );
GroovyClassLoader loader = AccessController.doPrivileged( new PrivilegedAction<GroovyClassLoader>() {
public GroovyClassLoader run() {
return new GroovyClassLoader( parentLoader, CompilerConfiguration.DEFAULT );
}
} );
Class<?> scriptClass = loader.parseClass( gcs, false );
That's was the expensive part. Now use InvokeHelper to bind the compiled code to a context (with global variables) and run it:
Binding context = new javax.script.Binding();
Script script = InvokerHelper.createScript(scriptClass, context);
script.run();